Business
Cardinal Health: Why This Essential Healthcare Distributor Deserves A Buy Rating
I am an individual investor with over 12 years of research experience in financial markets, with a strong focus on dividend investing and long-term portfolio building. Over time, my main goal has been to create a retirement-style portfolio for myself and my family, centered on stability, reliable income, and steady compounding over the long run. My approach is disciplined and quality-focused. I look for strong companies with simple and understandable business models, consistent cash flows, and a proven ability to pay and grow dividends over time. For me, long-term consistency matters far more than short-term gains or speculative opportunities. I am particularly interested in sectors such as consumer staples, healthcare, financials, industrials, and selected technology companies that have reached a stage where they can support stable and growing shareholder returns. I prefer businesses with durable competitive advantages, responsible management teams, and a strong track record of capital allocation. While I do not hold formal financial certifications or institutional affiliations, I have spent more than a decade actively studying and following markets. My experience is built on reading financial reports, analyzing earnings results, and tracking macroeconomic trends over time. This hands-on learning process has helped me develop a consistent and long-term-oriented investment framework. My motivation for writing on Seeking Alpha is to share my perspective on dividend investing and long-term wealth building. I hope to contribute useful, research-based ideas for investors who are also focused on building sustainable income portfolios. At the same time, I value being part of a community where ideas are shared and challenged, as this helps refine my own thinking and improve my investment approach over time.
Analyst’s Disclosure: I/we have no stock, option or similar derivative position in any of the companies mentioned, and no plans to initiate any such positions within the next 72 hours. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.
Seeking Alpha’s Disclosure: Past performance is no guarantee of future results. No recommendation or advice is being given as to whether any investment is suitable for a particular investor. Any views or opinions expressed above may not reflect those of Seeking Alpha as a whole. Seeking Alpha is not a licensed securities dealer, broker or US investment adviser or investment bank. Our analysts are third party authors that include both professional investors and individual investors who may not be licensed or certified by any institute or regulatory body.
Business
Mexico stocks lower at close of trade; S&P/BMV IPC down 0.02%

Mexico stocks lower at close of trade; S&P/BMV IPC down 0.02%
Business
German Drone Maker Quantum Systems Raises Funding at $8 Billion Valuation
Quantum Systems said it had raised $1.2 billion at a valuation of roughly $8 billion, bringing in fresh capital to expand drone production and invest in software for autonomous systems powered by artificial intelligence.
The startup said European aircraft maker Airbus, asset manager Blackstone, private-equity firm Advent and equity investor Noteus Partners co-led the financing round, which also attracted interest from technology investment firm BOND, financial services firm Fidelity Investments, asset manager Wellington Management, investment firm A.P. Moller Holding, venture-capital firm Elephant Lake Ventures and existing shareholders like Balderton and HV Capital.
Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Business
Supreme Court’s Barrett fuels conservative wins while sometimes splitting with Trump

Supreme Court’s Barrett fuels conservative wins while sometimes splitting with Trump
Business
A Cable Scion’s Hardest Deal Yet: Comcast Co-CEO Brian Roberts’ Plan to Break Up His Family’s Company
Comcast CMCSA 0.25%increase; up pointing triangle co-Chief Executive Brian Roberts spent his 67th birthday finalizing a plan to split the cable and entertainment company his family built in two.
“Ralph would be excited,” one of his children texted him Sunday, referring to Ralph Roberts, the patriarch who co-founded and ran Comcast for nearly 40 years.
Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Business
Heat Waves Are Becoming a Chronic Drag on the Economy
Heat waves are underscoring how global warming has become a here-and-now issue for economists.
Temperatures are rising ahead of the July 4 weekend, with 100-degree highs—feeling hotter due to the humidity—forecast for various parts of the central and Eastern U.S. Areas home to more than 150 million people were covered by National Weather Service heat alerts as of midweek.
Copyright ©2026 Dow Jones & Company, Inc. All Rights Reserved. 87990cbe856818d5eddac44c7b1cdeb8
Business
Heat wave disrupts Fourth of July events across eastern US

Heat wave disrupts Fourth of July events across eastern US
Business
Death toll of Venezuela earthquakes rises to 2,645

Death toll of Venezuela earthquakes rises to 2,645
Business
Brazil stocks higher at close of trade; Bovespa up 0.74%

Brazil stocks higher at close of trade; Bovespa up 0.74%
Business
Apple’s Foldable iPhone Surge Saves the S&P 500 From a Chip Rout as Weak Jobs Report Divides Wall Street
NEW YORK — Apple’s stock surged nearly 5% Thursday, adding roughly $182 billion in market capitalization in a single session and single-handedly preventing what would have been a much sharper decline for the broader S&P 500, as a weak June jobs report, an ongoing chip sector pullback and lingering Middle East uncertainty sent most of the rest of the technology market lower heading into the Fourth of July holiday weekend.
The S&P 500 managed to finish essentially flat on the day, down just 0.2% by midday before recovering ground, while the Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.7% and the Nasdaq Composite declined 0.8%. Eight of the 10 largest market capitalization moves in the S&P 500 on Thursday were negative, including sharp declines for Tesla and Micron Technology. Without Apple’s contribution, analysts noted, the broader index would have recorded a considerably more painful session.
The catalyst for Apple’s surge was a Bloomberg report indicating the company had instructed its parts suppliers to prepare for a large-scale rollout of foldable iPhones this fall, with the expected production target for 2026 now rising to approximately 10 million units, up from earlier forecasts of 7 to 8 million. That order volume increase signals Apple’s confidence that consumer demand for its first foldable smartphone will exceed initial projections. Alongside the foldable, Apple is reportedly preparing roughly 70 million iPhone 18 Pro and Pro Max units, setting up what the company expects to be one of the most commercially significant product launches in its recent history.
The foldable iPhone news came at an opportune moment for Apple investors who have been watching the stock navigate a difficult stretch defined by supply chain pressures, memory chip cost increases and publicly disclosed price hikes on its Mac and iPad lineups. The prospect of a new form factor capable of driving a significant upgrade cycle among the company’s existing customer base gave investors a concrete growth narrative to focus on heading into the back half of 2026.
The rest of the day told a very different story for much of the technology sector. Tesla fell 7.4% even as the company reported June vehicle deliveries that came in 18% above analyst estimates, a counterintuitive reaction that market observers attributed almost entirely to profit-taking following a 13% price surge over the prior four trading sessions. Micron Technology, similarly near all-time highs after its extraordinary year-to-date run of more than 300%, declined 5.8%, weighed down in part by a price-fixing lawsuit related to older memory types that circulated through the financial news cycle during the session. Both moves contributed to the Nasdaq’s underperformance, though neither Tesla nor Micron is a component of the Dow, which helps explain the divergence between the blue-chip index’s gain and the tech-heavy Nasdaq’s decline.
The macro backdrop for Thursday’s session was defined by the June nonfarm payrolls report, which landed well below expectations. The Labor Department reported 57,000 new positions added in June, against economist forecasts of 110,000. May’s payroll numbers were revised downward as well. The unemployment rate edged lower to 4.2% from 4.3%, a technically positive reading but one that contradicts the weak hiring figure and reflects a falling labor force participation rate rather than broad employment strength. Treasury yields declined in response to the soft data, as bond market investors recalibrated expectations toward a Federal Reserve that would face reduced pressure to raise interest rates given the cooling labor market.
The geopolitical dimension of Thursday’s session involved the Strait of Hormuz, where the vessel backlog waiting to transit the critical waterway fell to 380 ships from 485 earlier in the week. However, only five ships actually passed through the strait in the preceding 24 hours, underscoring how far the shipping situation remains from normal despite diplomatic progress. U.S. and Iranian negotiators wrapped up the latest round of talks in Doha claiming what participants described as positive momentum, though no concrete breakthroughs have been announced. The next scheduled discussion will follow funeral proceedings for Iran’s late Supreme Leader, which are expected to conclude by July 9, a timeline that introduces additional uncertainty about when the substantive diplomatic work can resume.
Oil prices continued falling Thursday despite the limited physical improvement in Hormuz traffic, suggesting markets are pricing in future progress rather than current conditions. Gold and Bitcoin rallied simultaneously for the second consecutive session, a combination that some market participants described as unusual and potentially significant. The SPDR Gold Shares fund rose 2.1% while the iShares Bitcoin Trust ETF gained 2.6%. When investors move into both traditional and digital safe-haven assets at the same time, it typically signals a broad underlying uncertainty rather than a specific sectoral rotation.
The broader week produced a pattern analysts have flagged as the dominant theme of 2026’s market: a clear rotation from high-flying technology and semiconductor growth names into steadier, more traditionally valued sectors including financials and industrials. The Dow outperforming the Nasdaq by 1.5 percentage points on Thursday alone illustrated that rotation in concentrated form. The chip sector’s two-day decline followed an 82% first-half gain across semiconductor stocks broadly, making some degree of consolidation not only expected but arguably overdue. The speed of the correction, however, has surprised even observers who anticipated a pullback after the sector’s extraordinary run.
With U.S. markets closed Friday for the Independence Day holiday, which falls on Saturday this year, investors have a long weekend to reassess their positions before trading resumes Monday. The Fourth of July closure also pushed the jobs report to Thursday rather than its usual Friday slot, making this week’s already compressed four-day schedule feel even more event-dense than typical pre-holiday periods.
Monday’s reopening will bring investors back to a market still processing a complicated set of signals: Apple’s foldable iPhone optimism colliding with a softening labor market, an ongoing diplomatic standoff in one of the world’s most important shipping lanes, a chip sector finding its footing after an extraordinary first half, and a Federal Reserve whose next move remains genuinely uncertain in a way that it has not been for much of the past several months. Whether Apple’s foldable iPhone story can maintain the momentum it generated Thursday, or whether the broader rotation out of technology names continues to dominate, will likely define the market’s first week of July trading when it resumes after the holiday break.
Business
Holiday Halt: NYSE, Nasdaq to remain closed today for Independence Day holiday
The closure applies to major US stock exchanges, including the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, as well as the bond market. The bond market also ended trading early on Thursday, closing at 2 pm Eastern Time ahead of the long holiday weekend.
The holiday schedule follows the standard US market convention under which Independence Day is observed on the preceding Friday when July 4 falls on a Saturday. As a result, investors will have a three-day weekend before trading resumes with regular hours on Monday.
While stock and bond markets are shut, cryptocurrency markets continue to operate around the clock without interruption. Most commercial banks remain open on Friday, although some branches may operate with modified hours depending on the institution. Postal and delivery services largely maintain normal operations on Friday before adjusting schedules for the holiday on Saturday.
The market closure comes after investors digested the June U.S. employment report, which influenced expectations for the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate path heading into the holiday weekend.
US financial markets will remain closed on Friday, July 3, in observance of the Independence Day holiday, as July 4 falls on a Saturday this year. Trading in equities and bonds will resume on Monday, July 6.
The closure applies to major US stock exchanges, including the New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, as well as the bond market. The bond market also ended trading early on Thursday, closing at 2 p.m. Eastern Time ahead of the long holiday weekend.The holiday schedule follows the standard US market convention under which Independence Day is observed on the preceding Friday when July 4 falls on a Saturday. As a result, investors will have a three-day weekend before trading resumes with regular hours on Monday.
While stock and bond markets are shut, cryptocurrency markets continue to operate around the clock without interruption. Most commercial banks remain open on Friday, although some branches may operate with modified hours depending on the institution. Postal and delivery services largely maintain normal operations on Friday before adjusting schedules for the holiday on Saturday.
The market closure comes after investors digested the June U.S. employment report, which influenced expectations for the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate path heading into the holiday weekend.
The shortened trading week was marked by heightened attention to economic data and monetary policy expectations. Investors assessed the latest labor market figures alongside signs of moderating inflation, with market participants recalibrating expectations for the timing and extent of future Federal Reserve interest-rate decisions. Trading volumes also tended to thin out ahead of the extended holiday weekend as many institutional investors wrapped up positions before the market closure.
Looking ahead, investors will return to a calendar packed with corporate earnings announcements and fresh economic indicators that could shape sentiment in the second half of the year. Market participants will continue to monitor inflation trends, labor market conditions and comments from Federal Reserve officials for clues on the central bank’s policy trajectory, while developments in global trade and geopolitics are also expected to remain in focus.
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